By Paul Goble
Many observers are aware that ethnic
Azerbaijanis constitute more than a quarter of the population of Iran, but
fewer have taken note of the fact that other Turkic groups from the Russian
Empire, the Soviet Union and the Russian Federation are present in that country
and are undergoing some remarkable ethnic and political transformations.
Perhaps the largest of these, and certainly the one with the most resonance in
Russia today, are the Volga Tatars, who arrived in several waves over the last
century but who are treated by the Iranians as Turkmens and, consequently, are
being “Turkmenified.”
A rare window on that community was
recently provided by Kazan’s Real Time
news agency, which has both interviewed specialists on Turkic groups in Iran
and conducted its own research into a national diaspora few have ever heard of (Real
Time, June 2,
3).
The reason for this new focus lies in Kazan not Iran: Recently, under pressure
from Moscow, Kazan Federal University closed its Tatar studies faculty; and the
Real Time news agency has been
publishing materials on Tatar communities abroad in order to make the argument
that Kazan needs to restore that scholarly center in order to keep track of
developments across the Volga Tatar world.
Volga Tatars
have resided in what is now Iran for more than a millennium, but the largest
recent group to arrive was composed of those who fled Soviet power in the 1920s
and 1930s, for religious or ethnic reasons. No one knows exactly how many Volga
Tatars live in Iran. (Some estimates put their number in Iran as high as
30,000.) The Iranian census avoids asking about ethnic identities. And according
to experts like Gorgun University’s Arazmuhamad Sarly, himself an ethnic
Turkmen, many of the Volga Tatars have assimilated to the Turkmen community and
are viewed both by most Turkmens and almost all Persians as part of that
community given that they have learned Turkmen, intermarry routinely, and share
culture activities. One of the few remaining distinctions is that, in many
places, the Volga Tatars still prefer to be buried in their own national
cemeteries (Real Time, June 2).
Turkmen-language
publications currently exist in Iran, and many of them contain stories about
the Volga Tatars in Iran and in their homeland. But so far, according to Sarly,
the Volga Tatars of Iran do not have their own publications or public
associations, preferring instead to participate in those of the Turkmens, who
are estimated to number as many as 100,000 in Iran. The Turkmen scholar told
the Kazan news agency that he would welcome cooperation with Tatarstani
scholars to study this group (Real Time, June 2).
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